The Journal of nervous and mental disease
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J. Nerv. Ment. Dis. · Jun 1988
Alexithymia and somatization. A Rorschach study of four psychosomatic groups.
The construct of alexithymia has been postulated as a predisposing factor in psychosomatic illness. The alexithymia construct has achieved wide currency in psychosomatic research and theorizing despite its doubtful psychometric foundations. Also, the question of between-group variability in alexithymia has not been addressed. ⋯ Additionally, exploratory comparisons between psychosomatic groups revealed a number of differences between the groups in basic personality processes. The findings show promise for the use of the Rorschach test as an alexithymia measure. Based on the current study, heterogeneous grouping of psychosomatic patients in research designs and treatment programs appear to be a highly questionable procedure.
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The use of emergency room time by medical and psychiatric clinicians evaluating psychiatric patients was studied. The amount of time to the completion of the medical and the psychiatric evaluation and the actual amount of time of the psychiatric evaluation were compared over demographic, admission, diagnostic, and referral factors. ⋯ The multiple time pressures in an emergency room setting appeared to affect when, but not how long, clinicians evaluated psychiatric patients. The time that emergency room clinicians take to begin evaluations of psychiatric patients may reflect important observational data that affect their temporal, diagnostic, and recommended treatment patterns.
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J. Nerv. Ment. Dis. · Jan 1987
The role of brief instructions and suggestibility in the elicitation of auditory and visual hallucinations in normal and psychiatric subjects.
The present study is an investigation of the elicitation of auditory and visual hallucinations by brief instructions and the relationship of the report of hallucinatory-type experiences to standard measures of suggestibility. Two experiments were carried out. The first used normal subjects predisposed or not predisposed to hallucinate, as assessed by the Launay-Slade Hallucination Scale (LSHS-A). ⋯ The high LSHS-A scorers and the hallucinating psychiatric patients were significantly more likely to hear suggested sounds than were their respective controls. High LSHS-A scorers were also significantly more likely to see suggested objects than were their respective controls, although this finding was not replicated in the psychiatric subjects. No significant differences on measures of suggestibility were found between the groups, although in the psychiatric group Barber Test Suggestion and Subjective Involvement scores correlated positively with LSHS-A scores.
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Patients with chronic pain syndromes are commonly depressed. Chronic pain populations also contain distinct subgroups of personality profiles as defined by the MMPI. To assess the relevance of personality subtype to affective disorder we determined the relationship of psychiatric diagnoses defined by Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) to MMPI subgroups in a sample of hospitalized patients with predominantly chronic low back pain. ⋯ No other psychiatric diagnoses were significantly associated with distinct personality subgroups. No relationship was observed between personality profile and presence of demonstrable organic etiology for pain. These findings indicate that behavioral and pharmacological interventions directed at depression as well as pain are important in the treatment of chronic pain populations, especially in selected subgroups.
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The assessment of patients with chronic pain is receiving increasing attention by psychiatrists. Recent publications have put forward the concept of the "pain-prone disorder" as a variant of depressive illness. This study describes a series of 50 consecutive patients with chronic pain in terms of the five axes of the DSM-III nosology. ⋯ The author suggests that although pain-proneness is a useful psychodynamic concept, the case for its establishment as a new psychobiological disorder is not proven. Furthermore, the concepts of pain-proneness, depression, and psychogenic pain have become confused. The author argues that the current classification is adequate to deal with the varieties of depression associated with chronic pain and that psychogenic pain disorder should be remerged with conversion disorder for the sake of clarity.